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introt writes "After first being blocked in 2008, an Italian court has once again ruled that ISPs in the nation must block access to the infamous torrent tracker The Pirate Bay, leaving millions of users without access to one of the most popular sites on the planet. In the original case, after an appeal by the Pirate Bay, the Court of Bergamo ruled that foreign websites cannot be blocked over alleged copyright infringement. Fast forward until today and the Supreme Court has ruled that ISPs can indeed be forced to block torrent sites, even if they are foreign-based."

This is more like thinking a ban on the sale of hunting knives will prevent murder. Actually it is a little more like telling the transit company that they can't have transit routes that pass by one store that sells knives, but doing nothing about people walking there or taking a taxi, or even the other stores.

It's sad and interesting actually, while 'murder' is a bad example specifically, the potential crime of just 'killing a person' can actually get you a much much lighter sentence than getting caught sharing 2-3 CDs.

After all, manslaughter can be zero to just a couple years in jail. After that time you can begin to rebuild your life and carry on.

When you make minimum wage or less, a multimillion dollar fine is effectively a life sentence that you will never be out from under.

A much better comparison is the crime of 'rape'. Assuming it is not committed against a child, then you are guaranteed to get a sentence much lighter than that of file sharing.Only a couple to a few years of time, instead of all of the remaining years of your time you have left.

Sad sad day when harming and mentally scaring someone for life is barely a punishment compared to sharing songs.

Yes, and that does not absolve you of debt from a judgment against you. Neither chapter 7 OR 13 will do this.

What it will do is manage your budget for you in a form you can 'afford'.Basically you prove your monthly living bills, they strike off all but the necessities required to survive, and let you keep exactly that from your paycheck. They keep most of the rest to pay off your debt.

Your bankruptcy lasts until that remainder pays the whole debt, during which time bill

That phrase bugs me. It really should be "Two wrongs don't necessarily make a right".

As a simple example, imagine a card game. Say, blackjack. Assuming the cards are reasonably randomized, each player (assume 2 players) has the same chance of winning/losing. This is the way the game should be- this is 'Right'.

If one person does a 'wrong' and marks the cards, they have given themselves an unfair advantage.

If the other person then marks the cards (a 'wrong'), then they have given themselves the same advantage

You forgot the next step--ISP's will start actively blocking proxies and proxy list sites. It's only a matter of time before it happens in the U.S. too. And geeks who say that such blocks are trivial to get around have never had to deal with well-maintained blockers like Websense.

I was about to say, Tor makes this all useless anyways, as well, makes anyone that has half a brainto realize they are fighting a loosing battle spending all the tax payers money doing it in the process.

I was about to say, Tor makes this all useless anyways, as well, makes anyone that has half a brain to realize they are fighting a loosing battle spending all the tax payers money doing it in the process.

Unless, of course, they make it illegal to use encryption, except when connecting to a website in a list of licensed businesses.

The simple, awful truth is that the Internet will go away eventually. It got this far because it caught the people in power - both businesses and politicians - by surprise; it will be killed as a communication medium eventually.

Freedom is anomaly in human history, it never lasts. It's just a little spark in the ocean of tyranny, soon to be extinguished whenever it appears. The people who make the rules will always be better served by making rules that crush everyone else under their heel.

Fortunately there is nothing the governments can do to stop the communication and exchange of bytes, and information. Some business depends on the internet, and there is no way they would kill their golden goose, such as Microsoft, Amazon, etc.

> Freedom is anomaly...

Government is anomaly in human history, it never lasts. It's just a little spark in the ocean of tyranny, soon to be extinguished by the masses of people demanding that their voices are heard.

On one hand, this will deter casual users. On the other, restricting access to the torrent sites does nothing to stop the use of torrents..torrent files are small and with distributed tracking now coming into use... Piratebay can continue to function effectively even though its domain is blacklisted.

So this move has been anticipated, counter-measures deployed, and they are effective. Update the host file in the user's brain and you're good to go. ^_^

Not even that. They will access a board of their choice and whine that TPB is no longer accessible, then they will be pointed at tor.eff.org (or a similar service) and the whole deal that took months to hash out (and probably a few bucks spent here or there...) is rendered obsolete within mere minutes.

Not even that. They will access a board of their choice and whine that TPB is no longer accessible, then they will be pointed at tor.eff.org (or a similar service) and the whole deal that took months to hash out (and probably a few bucks spent here or there...) is rendered obsolete within mere minutes.

The only reason these measures are even attempted is because so many users don't even know to do that. They think the internet is broken when they can't login to facebook. They don't distinguish between servers, routers, clients, and all that... they know a black box in their house is connected to the internet. And sometimes the black box doesn't work and a geek-friend needs to poke it. They know ctrl+alt+del and unplugging and plugging it back in.

Average people are about habits. They don't know much more than what they're shown and they don't want to learn more than they need to. That's the only reason rulings like this happen (and have an effect)... it takes months to years for the collective knowledge to reach their ears and a new habit to be established.

Half the techies I work with can't remember unplugging and plugging it back in. You really think the general user remembers that much?

I've been using computers since not long after I could read and write. I've done several years of tech support, field work, net/sys admin work, and deployment. I can say with confidence, yes -- the average user remembers that much. What they don't think of is that wires can come loose, expansion cards can be jostled from their seats, and ports can fail because after several hundred plug/unplug cycles those little surface-mounted USB and firewire ports come loose. But it still looks the same. Average users don't think of things like that.

As to techies not remembering that... Well, just because you work in this industry doesn't mean you do well in it. *shrug* I consider 'techie' a title you earn like any other and I don't call someone that unless they've proven themselves. You shouldn't either -- we all benefit from a meritocratic culture.

If you can only remember a single combo, Ctrl+Alt+Del is actually slightly more useful, because it is trapped on kernel level very early on - even if an application is running in fullscreen mode and intercepting all input, it can't intercept that one (in general, no userspace code can do that - you need a hacked keyboard driver for it). So, there are occasional cases where Ctrl+Alt+Del can get you out of a misbehaving application, where Ctrl+Shift+Esc wouldn't work.

Are casual users really using TPB and torrents in general? After all, keep in mind, that'd require them to download a tiny file, then download a torrenting program, and set that up properly (checking ports and such). Then actually open the torrent in the program. The casual user you're talking about would probably think that tiny thing they downloaded was the movie/song/program they were looking for, and wondered why it didn't work.

This is getting very frightening; corporations are now able to use anti-piracy laws to decide what people can and can't communicate. It's not so much a slippery slope as it is a free fall from the edge of the mountain.
What's next, banning google because you can add the word "torrent" to a search?

Corporation can't buy votes - at least as long as you can't prove who you voted for. Your vote is only influenced by the media if you believe the media. People on the whole are remarkably savvy about stuff that actually affects their daily lives - media buys to influence elections works well for stuff that people only care about in the abstract, but not for stuff that affects us directly. And with the rise of blogging, traditional media buys are becoming less influential over time anyhow.

In any case, a corporation is not an evil demon summoned from the blackest depths, but a group of people, and last I checked people in the US have a right to assemble and speak out on political matters. Whether incorporated or not, you can't just just decide that a group of peope can't get together and give money to a cause they support.

Maybe the problem is the powers given to the government fictions called 'corporations' and not free speech?

Remember, non-limited non-public-benefit corporations were effectively banned in the US until the 1860's when John D. Rockefeller lobbied to get Standard Oil a permanent charter. Then a footnote in Santa Clara gave them personhood.

None of these things were designed into the Republic - they are vestiges of later corruption. SCOTUS took the right first step, we need to demand the rest.

Probably. This whole thing copyright crusade just turned for the worse, now that the biggest Dutch investment agency (ABP, the pension fund for civil servants) last week announced (in a very small article) that they were moving into copyrights, because that is were currently most of the money is being made. The invested a small part of their portfolio, a few billion euro (small change), and were thinking of expanding because it was so profitable.

"leaving millions of users without access to one of the most popular sites on the planet" is a bullshit plea. Don't give me this "would somebody think of the children!" argument. It's bullshit.

It isn't that hard to understand why a court might not be fans of a website whose content is at least 95% links to stuff that is illegal!

Nothing is going to make illegal downloading go away. I think it's fair to say some folks have spent a good portion of the last two decades trying. But, let's not act like it's a travesty that a court didn't side with the downloaders.

Lemme know of another way to test a game to see if it's shit before buying it (no refunds, after all), or locate a stupidly-hard-to-find-movie that Amazon, your local retailers, and your local rental places don't carry.

I don't see why PC gamers should be fucked when it comes to seeing if a game's shitty just because of piracy concerns. I don't want to give my money to someone who doesn't deserve it, and there's a number of games that getting to rent it for a couple days, or even getting a *proper* demo (none of this 15 minute bullshit) would let me know to either spend the $50-$60, or move on.

As for my other scenario, I wanna watch a movie. The entire point of making a movie is to have people watch it. I did my dues, checking all the channels that would result in revenue for the creator, but they didn't see fit to exercise those options, or keep those options open, for some reason. If I've done my part in attempting to pay, why should I then not be able to watch it freely? It's not like they're losing a sale, and if I find it ever, I'll buy it (done that more than once).

So no, it isn't true that "The only reason someone would go to TPB would be to obtain copyrighted material without the need to pay for the material."

Don't buy a game unless you know it's good. Simple as that. You don't have a fundamental right to try before you buy - if the demo isn't enough to know, just don't buy it. It's a feeble excuse.

There's certainly an argument to be made in the case of a movie that simply cannot be obtained otherwise, but the catalog of places like NetFlix is pretty huge. What you really seem to be saying (and the reason I think most people torrent movies) is that you're willing to pay, but you're not willing for it to be inconvenient, so the owners had better make it convenient or they get nothing. Again, that's a right you don't have (but if I were a movie studio, I'd know that was my new business model!).

Well, you used to actually--it was called "returning it if it sucks." Unfortunately publishers did everything they could to tie each purchase to a one-time online account and put pressure on retailers to no longer accept opened game returns, so if a game sucks, you are stuck with it. Thus, I have no pity these companies when they whine about piracy--I have downloaded many games that have sucked and am glad I didn't waste my money. I have also downloaded many games that rocked and then proceeded to pay full price for it and recommend it to my friends.

The fact is, you don't have the right to test a game to see if it's shit before buying it.

You. Don't. Have. That. Right.

You can buy it, or not, or the game company can provide a reasonable demo. Or you can break the law. Which isn't an enormous ethical violation in my book, but at the same time, don't be surprised when the court doesn't side with you for willfully disregarding the law because you want to try out a video game.

I'm a lot more favourable to the stupidly-hard-to-find content where you can'

You say it largely contains information about where copyright infringement is occurring. It reveals this information equally to everyone who wants to look, including the people whose copyright is being infringed and their agents in law enforcement. Nowhere would you find such an organized and open collection of information about ongoing criminal activity. And it's freely volunteered by the infringers!

And you want to shut it down?!

It can only because it is so embarrassing, like a website identifying streets

But, let's not act like it's a travesty that a court didn't side with the downloaders.

What is the Law? An arbitrary sequence of rules which must be followed come what may? A code which it is always and everywhere immoral to to disobey, even in spirit? An elaborate ritual which those skilled in the art can obtain whatever outcome they please?

The function of the court system is to interpret the law in such a way that justice is served. When billions across the world withdraw their moral support fro copyrighted works and see nothing wrong with filesharing, are they wrong simply because the law says they are wrong? Or is it rather the law that is wrong, for unjustly imposing outdated or undemocratic views upon the population?

The law and the legal system gets too much of a free pass by too many people. It is as fallible and flawed a system as any other designed by human beings and its decisions are not always morally right, or even ethically so. You'll understand the fantasy when you finally have your day in court.

The function of the court system is to interpret the law in such a way that justice is served.

You can make that argument about a common law system, but Italy has a civil law system. In which case you are 100% wrong, the function of the court system there is merely to apply the law as written. Questions of justice don't enter into it.

Tell that to the literal constitutionalists, or those bitching about activist judges. Face it, all legal systems are designed to provide justice. Whether you agree with the definition of justice behind the legal system or not goes a long way in whether you think it is being just.

It's not a matter of what is on the website as much as it is this: many of us see a bleak future when law dictates what sites we can and cannot visit on the internet.

This ruling means that rather than only taking down websites that cause direct harm to a person or a group of people, access to sites can be removed even if they fall within copyright gray areas, where laws and ideas are different all over the world, or where they possibly threaten financial harm (no matter how [un]justified) to large organizations.

It's like taking a magazine off the stands in just one country because it says anti-patriotic things about its leader. or, if you want to go into the realm of content legality, a magazine that tells you how to exploit DNS vulnerabilites (3 cheers for the 2600 periodical).

It isn't that hard to understand why a court might not be fans of a website whose content is at least 95% links to stuff that is illegal!

The only things found on torrent servers that is illegal are things like child pornography. Movies aren't illegal. Songs aren't illegal. I doubt PirateBay links to anything actually illegal to watch or listen to.

With or without PirateBay the torrents themselves are still legal to access.

The only things found on torrent servers that is illegal are things like child pornography. Movies aren't illegal. Songs aren't illegal. I doubt PirateBay links to anything actually illegal to watch or listen to.

None of those series of bits are illegal per se. Perhaps, possessing them, creating them, copying them, or distributing them... But no thing is illegal, only actions are.

It doesn't matter what the court 'thinks'. The issue is (no matter how it is stated) that this is an attack on 3rd parties instead of the people 'responsible'.
Either:
Go after distributors (insanely difficult = costly) which do something 'bad'
Go after the thieves (people at home = costly) which do something 'bad'
Go after the ISPs (easy to shut off the 'valve') which do absolutely nothing wrong.

I don't want to know what the court is a 'fan' of. This is in italy so they can set up whatever asinine fr

Are they planning to block Google too? You can find a crap load of torrents through simple google searches. Not to mention (as the article does) all the other specific.torrent search sites. Or proxies. Or tor. Or rapidshit. Or FTP. Or Usenet. Or other P2P networks/apps. (AD INFINITUM)

So what if it is popular!? We block Nazi sites and other sites we deem are culturally or economically hazardous. Bottom line is that - today - distributing files your don't have permission to access or share is illegal. This is not an argument whether or not copyright laws are just or unjust. Simply, this is blocking illegal content. It is not the same as China censoring sites the government approve of. (I am sure the US gov is blocking sites, too.)

I think the bigger argument against blocking Pirate Bay is that they are an index, not a a distributor.

This is not an argument whether or not copyright laws are just or unjust. Simply, this is blocking illegal content. It is not the same as China censoring sites the government approve of

Since it's illegal for the Chinese to see the sites China blocks, what's the difference? In either case, the government is blocking sites it doesn't want you to see. To Quote Mr. Blues, "I hate Illinois Nazis" but I will defend their right to spew their obnoxious garbage in Germany as vehemently as I will defend the Chinese people's right to see crap their government doesn't want them to see.

We block Nazi sites

WE don't. My government doesn't. Your "we" is a bit too inclusive, and your post is a bit to parochial. For someone who agrees that it's OK to block Nazi sites while denying China's right to block certain cults' sites is a bit hypocritical.

Your "we" is a bit too inclusive, and your post is a bit to parochial. For someone who agrees that it's OK to block Nazi sites while denying China's right to block certain cults' sites is a bit hypocritical.

Well, censorship is censorship, and censorship is bad but... and this is a big but... there is a fundamental difference between the Chinese government using censorship to suppress the fundamental human rights of its people and the German government using censorship to suppress an ideology that was responsible for the greatest human rights abuses and the worst mass murder in human history.

Personally I don't agree with the German governments approach, but I do understand the problem that they face. They're da

I'm not comparing the great firewall of China to copyrigt infringement, I'm comparing it to Germany's blocking Nazi sites. Freedom of speech means freedom of all speech, not just speech you approve of. Quashing political speech (and the Nazis ARE political) is the worst sort of censorship, and in Germany's case I think is really dumb; the best way to fight speech is with more speech. Truth always trumps hatred and lies, and the Nazis are about as disgustingly hateful as one can get.

TFA and TFS both say that ISP's are required to block access to TPB's "Tracker". TFA goes on to mention "sites offering torrent links" but doesn't seem to make a distinction between.torrent files and the notorious "tracker".

Eh, maybe more people move to darknets or something. Basically, the more techies that move to that kind of thing, the sooner it'd hit mainstream. Things like this, even if it only pushes a half-dozen people, could help.

go to the maximum allowed power and maximum allowed antenna gain, and then set the network up using a protocol that can handle thousands of hops

Because it's that important to be able to rip off your entertainment! A massive, slow, thousand-hop mesh network makes far more sense than $1.50 video on demand that actually helps to pay to create the entertainment you'd rather steal. Sure, I'm following you. A lot of people would be all for someone else setting them up with a giant content-stealing network, sin

A lot of people would be all for someone else setting them up with a giant content-stealing network, since they'd like to leech off of their engineering efforts just like they'd like to continue to leech off of film makers and musicians.

A lot of people would happily help pay to set up that network, just like they'd happily help pay for the production of new content -- as long as they don't have to pay to use the network after it's set up, just like they don't want to pay for access to content after someone has voluntarily produced it.

What we need is a freenet-like system dedicated only to the distribution of.torrent files. Just embed it in a BT client and use DHT. Figure out how to fight that one, money gluttons!

I think that freenet-like system is called Freenet. I don't do the torrenting thing, but I'd be amazed if.torrent files weren't being traded on Freenet itself, via Frost or Freenet web sites. Of course, the more people who use freenet, the less you'll need a seperate torrenting system. If you're even a little paranoid, you'll realize that you want to encypt all your p2p traffic, at which point you'll do eveything on Freenet directly.

Eventually, of course, the government will just outlaw all encrypted tr

It takes a stream-lined solution to get a significant user-base. Integrating something like freenet, except optimized toward only.torrent files, into a BT client so all the user sees is a search bar and a list of results, each of which can be turned into a torrent download in that same client with a simple click, would be a significant step toward eliminating the current largest "weakness" in BT while actually increasing its ease of use.